Nearly 100 people were taken into custody at a concert at the Comcast Center in Mansfield Wednesday night, the Sun Chronicle reported.

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Police Chief Arthur O’Neill said that 95 people were taken into custody, with 35 arrested on criminal charges and 60 taken into protective custody, mostly for alcohol intoxication.

“We were very, very busy, but we managed,” O’Neill said, telling the newspaper that the number of people taken into custody was one of the highest of this concert season.

The performers on the Influence Tour included hip hop headliners Wiz Khalifa and Mac Miller.

Last week at the Identity Tour festival, two men died of a combination of drug and alcohol intoxication after being taken to area hospitals.

Nineteen-year-old Connor Brandon died at Boston Medical Center from the effects of several drugs, as well as alcohol that were in his system.

Police said Dominic Impelizzieri, 27, of Syracuse, N.Y., had been brought back from full cardiac arrest by emergency medical personnel but later died from the substances that he had ingested.

“It’s alcohol, alcohol, alcohol,” O’Neill said.

Most of problems occur in the parking lot, officials said.

Mansfield Selectman George Dentino wants more officers and firefighters working details at Comcast Center events.

“We can’t have, like I said, 26 policemen for 12,000 patrons or 40 policemen for 20,000 patrons. The odds are just out of sight,” Dentino said.

He said he also wants to impose random searches of minors and to have drug-sniffing police dogs at the gate.

“I think that puts the onus of responsibility on the people that are carrying drugs to make a decision: do they want to try to go in and get by the dogs, or they want to turn around and dump them back in the car?” he said.

Mansfield Town Manager William Ross, who works under the direction of the Board of Selectmen, said the police and fire departments are taking the incidents seriously, but there’s only so much they can do.

“No one can predict what will happen when individuals are involved,” Ross said. “We cannot control the actions of each and every person who attends.”

Some of the people at Friday’s Mayhem concert tended to agree with Ross.

“Kids, they are, unfortunately, they’re going to do what they’re going to do and it is up to the parent to teach them not to do those kind of things,” said Jessica Lemoin

“They can heighten security, (but) still going to have people out here partying and enjoying themselves before they go in for a show because, let’s face it, $9 for a beer inside is a little steep,” said Tim Marcotte.